Another view of the Ground Zero dig site from atop E10/L10's quarters.

Photo credit: Dave J. Iannone

Supplies (left) and a check-in, refreshment and wash station now fill E10/L10's bays which once housed the apparatus that was lost from the first due company to the World Trade Center. Five men were lost from the company.

Photo credit: Dave J. Iannone

A massive storage room was constructed in one of the bays at E10/L10. The bay doors were left open when units from the first due station responded to the WTC, causing substantial dust damage inside when the towers fell.

Photo credit: Dave J. Iannone

Two firefighters toil the ground deep inside the dig site, searching for any hint of human remains.

Photo credit: Dave J. Iannone

Another view of the clearing being done at the World Trade Center dig site.

Photo credit: Dave J. Iannone

A pair of buildings now towering over the somber scene at Ground Zero, were once dwarfed by the World Trade Center towers.

Photo credit: Dave J. Iannone

Only a sidewalk separates the bay doors of E10/L10 from the wall that surrounding the massive dig site at Ground Zero. Firefighters at the station say they look forward to the day when units respond from the station once again.

Photo credit: Dave J. Iannone

Actress Melissa Gilbert, President of the Screen Actors Guild, took pictures inside E10/L10 with the FDNY members on duty at the time before touring the site with FDNY staff and Red Cross volunteers. The station has been the gateway for folks from the average citizen to celebrities, world leaders and emergency services personnel from all over to pay their respects to FDNY's Fallen Heroes.

Photo credit: Dave J. Iannone

A sign to the upstairs of E10/L10 honors those five members lost from the house, one of hundreds of tributes to those and all of the emergency service personnel lost throughout and around the 'Tenhouse'.